Saturday, 19 December 2015

The National Investigation Agency probing the alleged ISIS module in India has managed to get a plethora of information from the chat transcripts. Among the many transcripts being scrutinised by the NIA, one read, " Good News, Ashok Singhal is dead."

Sirajuddin one of the main members of this alleged module was the most vocal on the chats. He would communicate with several members and even had spoken about the establishment of a Caliphate in Kashmir. He felt that the ISIS should launch its movement in Kashmir.

Celebrating death of VHP leader:
The chats do
indicate that there was a clear amount of hatred that these members had
for India. They felt that India must be rid of the Constitution and must
be governed by the Caliphate.
They would discuss every issue in
India. On November 17, 2005 following the death of VHP leader, Ashok
Singhal, there were celebrations online.
Sirajuddin who conveyed
the news regarding the death of Singhal posted online, " Good News,
Ashok Singhal is dead." NIA officials say that there were constant
attempts to communalise the youth they were trying to draw towards them.
He would boast that he had nearly 300 members with him. He also speaks about roping in more women into their fold.
Sirajuddin,
had several times indicated that he wanted to go to Syria and train.
However he was clear that after the training he wanted to return to
India and launch the movement in a big way from Kashmir.
In one of
the chats, he says that Kashmir should not be governed by Pakistan. It
should be under the Caliphate and he had even prepared a special
currency for the state.

‘IS man’ posted item on surveillance: Chargesheet

Days before his arrest late last year, Indian Oil Corporation Limited (IOCL) employee Mohammad Sirajuddin, accused of being an “Islamic State (IS) member”, had shared a news item on social media saying 150 youths were under surveillance of Indian investigating agencies for leanings towards IS, and allegedly posted guidelines regarding online “security”.

This is part of the 2,500-page chargesheet filed by the NIA recently in a Jaipur court against the former IOCL assistant marketing manager, that essentially talks about Sirajuddin’s activities on social media.

Sirajuddin shared the item on surveillance on November 19, 2015, and was arrested from Jaipur on December 10 by the Rajasthan ATS, for allegedly propagating IS ideology and inciting others to become its members. A resident of Gulbarga, Karnataka, and a father of two, Sirajuddin, while sharing the said news, had commented, “You are under surveillance! Be careful Indian brothers.”

Next day, on November 20, says the NIA chargesheet, he circulated six-point guidelines for “online security”. He also allegedly “guided” a contact to use virtual private network (VPN), “that will hide ur IP address and misguide if anyone searches for it to track u online (sic)”.

Other charges against Sirajuddin, who is lodged in Central Jail, Jaipur, include that in his conversations with his wife on WhatsApp, he “revealed” his intentions to make his son a mujahid to “go to heaven through his deeds, join IS with or without his family”. The chargesheet talks about the 33-year-old’s interactions on Facebook, WhatsApp, Telegram, Twitter, SMS, his Call Detail Records, as well as alleged “radical” documents downloaded by him.

According to the charge-sheet, Sirajuddin was in touch with several “radical” persons in various countries, including “IS operatives”, on social media. And that in a conversation with Abu Munafil Mufanil, an alleged IS operative, he had discussed plans to join the outfit, the route he should take, the cost of air journey from India to the Libyan capital of Tripoli.

Sirajuddin’s lawyer Paker Farooq says his interactions were “merely an exchange of views”. Denying the allegations, Sirajuddin’s wife Yasmeen Tarannum said, “He wanted to know about IS and may have downloaded something, but that is all. He is very humble and never even had an argument with anyone. How can they say he wanted to hurt anyone? They claim he was on the same WhatsApp group as some people in other countries? How does that make him an IS member?” She added that conversations, including between Sirajuddin and her, had been presented in a misleading manner.

Asserting that Sirajuddin was innocent, his father Mohammad Sarwar said, “We have hopes the court will deliver justice.”

Update (5/6) The National Investigation Agency on Saturday filed a chargesheet in a Jaipur court against 33-year-old Mohammed Sirajuddin for allegedly propagating Islamic State (IS) ideology and inciting others to become members of the banned organisation.

A resident of Gulbarga, Karnataka, Sirajuddin was working as an assistant manager with the Indian Oil Corporation Limited (IOCL) in Jaipur and lived with his wife and two children, when he was arrested by the Rajasthan ATS on December 10 last year.

As per NIA officials, “Investigation conducted has brought on record evidences of his incriminating chats, posts, videos, images and comments on Facebook, Whatsapp, Telegram and Twitter (which were) shared and circulated in groups and channels on various social networking sites. Investigation has also established his association with ISIS operatives from various countries who were actively propagating, promoting and inciting people online to join ISIS.”

The chargesheet was filed under IPC section 120B (criminal conspiracy) as well as sections 13 (punishment for unlawful activities), 18 (punishment for terrorist conspiracy, etc.), 38 (membership of terrorist organisation) and 39 (offences relating to the support given to a terrorist organisation) of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967.

NIA public prosecutor Ashwini Sharma said, “Sirajuddin was preparing to go to Tripoli, in Libya, and his passport was ready. He was active on the internet and communicated with people in various countries, including Libya, Iran, Iraq, Syria.”

While Sirajuddin was not produced in court, his lawyer Paker Farooq opposed the charges and said, “From the start, we have been stating that he has only exchanged his views on WhatsApp which is neither an offence nor a crime. Similarly, if you download material from the internet while surfing, it is not a crime.”

Referring to the nearly 2,500-page chargesheet, Farooq told The Sunday Express, “Our major concern is that the ATS had seized a laptop and a mobile phone from Sirajuddin on December 6 last year but arrested him on December 10. What was added or altered (in the laptop and the mobile phone), will be known only once we get through the chargesheet.” Official records show one laptop (Apple MacBook), one dual SIM mobile, two SIMs and a Secure Digital (SD) card was seized from Sirajuddin at the time of his arrest. Sirajuddin’s brother Mohammad Riyaz said, “We have full faith in the judiciary and are hopeful that justice will be delivered and his name will be cleared.”

Update (3/1) The ATS had launched a campaign to help de-radicalise youth who have
fallen prey to ISIS handlers and recruiters online. The campaign has so
far helped rescue 25 youth from across the state, and Islamic clerics
and scholars are aiding the ATS in this initiative. While screening the social media groups, the ATS discovered a
17-year-old girl from Pune, nicknamed Radical Gun, who was being coaxed
to fly to Syria and attend to wounded soldiers. The teenager had a 90%
score in her SSC and was pursuing medicine when she was roped in by the
social media handlers.

Another youth that the ATS rescued was a Hindu engineering student, who
had converted to Islam and had been teaching Arabic at Madrassas across
Gujarat and Uttar Pradesh. The boy is now helping the ATS sift through
jihadi material that is printed in Urdu and Arabic and circulated across
social media.

'They Wanted Me To Treat War Victims In Syria'

The 17-year-old girl is a lone child from an affluent family in Pune.
"Between April and August 2015, I was waiting for college to resume and
whiling time online. I came across the ISIS and my curiosity got the
better of me," the girl said.

"I started reading up on why people were supporting ISIS. The
information that I found was about the Dos and Don'ts about Islam. But
later, as I moved to Facebook, I became a part of the ISIS web group. I
shed my western attire and began wearing the burkha," she added.

"The group members kept egging me on, as I was the youngest in the group. I was online 24/7 posting and preaching."

This was when the group urged her and offered to sponsor her medical
education, so that she could attend to the wounded soldiers involved in
the war in Syria.

"Cops landed at my house and I was scared that I would be arrested.
However, I am thankful to the ATS for rescuing me from the dark side of
the ISIS. They helped me with sessions where Islamic scholars revealed
the truth to me," the 17-year-old added.

"This is really a new life for me. And now I have promised the ATS that I
will help them in de-radicalising youth and be part of the initiative."

ATS Campaign

The ATS initiative has so far been able to rescue about 25 youth. ACP
Bhanupratap Barge said, "During the interrogation of the suspects we
came to know that youngsters are brained washed and are often not aware
of what they are doing. In our interaction sessions with students we
share information about terror outfits, sleeper cells, their funding and
operational methods. We have more than 12,000 volunteers from different
colleges, who share and pass on information about suspicious movement
in their area and also about missing youngsters."

Help the ATS: If you spot any suspicious activity, you can share the
info by dropping a mail at ig.ats@mahapolice.gov.in or call on 022
23087336

Update (26/12) A new twist has emerged in the Anti-Terrorism Squad’s (ATS) investigations into the case of the missing Malwani men. The ATS suspects that the 17-year-old Pune girl — named ‘Radical Gun’ in jihadi chat rooms — was in touch with one of the Malwani four, and could have been instrumental in radicalising him. An ATS officer said, “Sirajuddin had given her a list of a few people. We even went through an online list of the girl’s group. We were shocked to find a name resembling that of one of the Malwani four, Wajid Sheikh. We suspect that it is the same Wajid who went missing, and was traced by our ATS team in Pune. We are currently verifying this, but both Wajid and girl are tough nuts to crack.”

The officer added, “Sirajuddin had tasked the girl with radicalising others. He had one lakh followers on Facebook. The girl was promised that she would go to Syria by 2017, where she could pursue medical studies and help ISIS. She was very good in putting forward the ideology, and had radicalised several youths.”

“We are trying to solve the mystery behind the Pune angle. She was part of a highly complex network of ISIS sympathisers,” said the officer. Currently, the girl is being de-radicalised by her parents and Muslim clerics. She is being taught the actual meaning of jihad and Islam.

Update (23/12)The 17-year-old Pune girl – who had been
radicalised online – had earned the moniker ‘Radical Gun’. She had
brainwashed four others as well. A top ATS officer said, “She was only
identified as Radical Gun on the Internet and with a group promoting
ISIS propaganda. In just four months, she was radicalised in such a way
that she later started radicalising other youths. She would teach and
convert people. All the contacts in her group are on the radar, several
of who are from Maharashtra.” She is currently being de-radicalised by
the ATS and Islamic clerics.

Update (22/12) Sirajuddin, an Indian Oil Corporation officer who has been detained in Jaipur. He allegedly radicalized the Pune girl and has been produced in a Jaipur court. There is no 'solid evidence' against him even though it was through his laptop that the Pune girl came to the attention of the authorities.

When the Maharashtra Anti- Terrorism Squad
(ATS) marched into the home of a 17-year-old Pune girl suspected of
being an Islamic State recruit, she knew exactly why they were there.
'Mein ISIS ko dawat deti hoon roz' (I give daily invitations to ISIS)
was her brazen response when the officers asked her whether she knew why
they were looking for her. For her family though, the revelation was a
bolt from the blue.

“We could not digest it at first, when the
police entered our home and explained why they had come. We had no clue
that she was under such negative influence. We are Muslim, but we hold
progressive beliefs. We had educated my niece in a good convent school;
she is a good student,” said the girl's uncle.

True, over the past few months, they had
watched her undergo a radical change – she had stopped wearing jeans
and other Western attire that she used to adore earlier, and refused to
step out of the house without a burkha. Her ideas about Islam had grown
orthodox, which became evident in the many debates she began to hold
about the religion. They had assumed this was all part of a teenager's
exploration of faith. They never imagined that she had been brainwashed
and recruited by extremists from the ISIS terror outfit.
It was particularly shocking since she hails from a well-educated
family that doted on her. “She is a star student who scored 90% in Std
X, and dreamed of studying Medicine or Engineering. Right now she is
studying Science in Std XI at a junior college in Pune,” said another
family member.

“An ATS officer said, “The girl had been
trained to stay calm and not fear cops. She spilled the beans when we
took her to our office with the consent of her mother and other
relatives. It became clear that she had been brainwashed over four
months. It was her curiosity about ISIS that had landed her in trouble,”
said an ATS officer.

He added, “The girl became curious about ISIS after she saw a
documentary film about them. She started surfing the Internet and soon
came into contact with ISIS agents on Facebook. She connected with them
through Facebook, Twitter and other social media and messaging
platforms. She became more active after her mother recently gave her a
smart phone.”

The baitWith her
father out of station, it was the girl's mother who took most of the
responsibility for her upbringing. “ISIS had lured her by promising to
sponsor her education in medicine. She was innocent, and thought that if
her fees were covered by them, she would not be a burden on her mother,
who works day and night for her. The ISIS agents claimed that as a
doctor she could help victimised people in Syria,” said an official.

The ATS officers and the girl's family
worked along with Muslim clerics and scholars to clear her questions
about Islam and 'de-radicalise' her. “Allah sent the ATS as our messiah,
to save our daughter from evil ideology. This is a second life for her.
We will try to forget all that has happened as a bad dream, and try to
teach her that Islam is about harmony. We hope that in the future, our
girl will make the country proud,” said the family members.Through Facebook, the girl had come into
contact with suspected ISIS agent Mohammad Sirajuddin, who is an Indian
Oil Corporation (IOC) manager in Rajasthan. He was arrested in Jaipur
on December 5. After scrutinising his laptops, the cops got on the trail
of the girl in Pune and went to question her, accompanied by women
officers. They are now also going through all her contacts to see what
other ISIS links may be found.

Not off the hook

Officials
from the ATS said they would continue to investigate the case and then
take a decision on the teenager's fate. “Even if the girl is a minor,
she is 17 years old. We are deeply scrutinizing her chats, her contacts
and her recent activity. If anything comes up, we will definitely
register a case against the girl and arrest her. We have not given her a
clean chit yet,” said a top officer. Meanwhile, the girl will continue
to be counselled by Muslim scholars, as well as a psychiatrist, said the
police.

Cops appeal to parents

Assistant
Commissioner of Police Bhanupratap Barge, in-charge of the ATS unit in
Pune, said, “We appeal to parents to keep an eye on their children. They
should observe their ward and try to talk to them. If they are not able
to communicate with them, parents can approach us, and we will help
them. We are also thankful that the girl's family was very co-operative,
which helped us to pull her out within 10 days.”

ExpertspeakDr Kersi Chavda, Consulting psychiatrist, Hinduja HospitalIt
might seem unusual that a youngster from a fairly liberal atmosphere
lands up being radicalised. Perhaps, the person felt there was something
missing in her life and getting into a religious movement answered the
missing link

Pune:
A 16-year-old Muslim girl, who was reportedly radicalised by her ISIS
contacts abroad and brain-washed to go to Syria, has been questioned by
sleuths of the Pune Anti-Terrorism Squad (ATS) and sent for a
de-radicalisation programme, an ATS officer said in Pune.

According to the officer, the girl is a convent educated class XI student, and is studying in a city college. "The
girl was interrogated by the ATS last week after monitoring her
movements for many days on getting information about her. It confirmed
her initiation by the ISIS."

"The interrogation of the girl
revealed that she was ready to go to any extent to carry out the ISIS
directive," Pune ATS officer Bhanupratap Barge told PTI.
The girl
is now undergoing a de-radicalisation programme with the help of her
family members and community religious leaders, who are fully
cooperating with us, he added.

According to the ATS, the minor
girl allegedly got attracted to the ISIS ideology after watching a
documentary on television and subsequently started regularly monitoring
news on Al Jazeera channel. "Later, she used the internet to get
in touch with ISIS contacts and got in touch with about 200 young people
from different countries. Her interrogation revealed that she was told
to come to Syria for medical education and for further initiation," Mr
Barge said. He said that the girl, had recently changed her
lifestyle and started wearing burqa, giving up jeans she used to wear
before her exposure to the ISIS contacts.
"Even her family members noticed the change in her and felt disturbed," the ATS inspector said.

Mr
Barge said the de-radicalisation programme of the ATS with the help of
community clergy and family members was "working" for the girl with
encouraging results.
Pune has been on the terrorist radar and had
witnessed bomb blasts including the German Bakery blast that killed 17
people including many foreigners in 2010.